Comparison of Clinical Efficacy Between Dynamic Dip Screw and Cannulated Compression Screw for Fr… (NCT04959370) | Clinical Trial Compass
CompletedNot Applicable
Comparison of Clinical Efficacy Between Dynamic Dip Screw and Cannulated Compression Screw for Fresh Femoral Neck Fracture
China91 participantsStarted 2012-01
Plain-language summary
For fresh femoral neck fracture internal fixation, both DHS and CCS can make strong fixation of hip and have good recovery. There is no statistical difference in complications after surgery between the two procedures. Patients with DHS internal fixation have earlier postoperative weight bearing, which is conducive to functional exercise of the injured limb. DHS internal fixation system is recommended for patients with unstable fractures and severe osteoporosis.
Who can participate
Age range20 Years – 65 Years
SexALL
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AI-rewrites the medical criteria so a patient or caregiver can understand them. Always confirm with the trial site.
Inclusion Criteria:
* fresh femoral neck fracture
* can walk before fracture
* less than 65 years old
Exclusion Criteria:
* Patients combined with other bone fractures.
* Pathological fracture (e.g., primary or metastatic tumor)
* Serious soft tissue injury, judged by the investigator, will impact the union of the fracture, combined open fractures, vascular injury, and combined osteofascial compartment syndrome.
* Multiple systemic injuries judged by researchers not suitable for enrollment. Revision surgeries (for example, due to malunion, nonunion or infection)
* Concurrent medical conditions judged by researchers not suitable for enrollment, such as: metabolic bone disease, post-polio syndrome, poor bone quality, prior history of poor fracture healing, etc
* Patients known to be allergic to implant components
* Patients who are currently using chemotherapeutics or accepting radiotherapy, use systematically corticosteroid hormone or growth factor, or long-term use sedative hypnotics (continuous use over 3 months) or non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (continuous use over 3 months)
* Subjects have significant neurological or musculoskeletal disorders or may have adverse effects on gait or weight-bearing (e.g., muscular dystrophy, multiple sclerosis, cerebral infarction, hemiplegia, Charcot arthropathy, avascular necrosis of the femoral head).
What they're measuring
1
Internal fixation failure rate
Timeframe: from operation to 1-year follow-up after the surgery